A rich, many-layered novel from one of our major writers, her first in nine years.
Set in the 1950s in West Virginia and Korea, it is a story of the power of loss and love, the echoing ramifications of war, family secrets, dreams and ghosts, and the unseen, almost magical bonds that unite and sustain us.
At its center: Lark and her brother, Termite, a child unable to walk and talk but full of radiance; their mother, Lola; their aunt, Nonie, who raises them; and Termite's father, Corporal Robert Leavitt, who finds himself caught up in the chaotic early months of the Korean War. Told with enormous imagination and deep feeling, the novel invites us into the hearts and thoughts of each of the leading characters; even into Termite's intricate, shuttered consciousness. We are with Leavitt, trapped by friendly fire. We see Lark's hopes for herself and Termite, and how she makes them happen. We learn of Lola's love for her soldier husband and children, and unravel the mystery of her relationship with Nonie. We discover the lasting connections between past and future on the night the town experiences an overwhelming flood, and we follow Lark and Termite as their lives are changed forever.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
Excerpts
From the book...
Winfield, West VirginiaJuly 26, 1959
Lark
I move his chair into the yard under the tree and then Nonie carries him out. The tree is getting all full of seeds and the pods hang down. Soon enough the seeds will fly through the air and Nonie will have hay fever and want all the windows shut to keep the white puffs out. Termite will want to be outside in the chair all the time then, and he'll go on and on at me if I try to keep him indoors so I can do the ironing or clean up the dishes. Sun or rain, he wants to be out, early mornings especially. "OK, you're out," Nonie will say, and he starts his sounds, quiet and satisfied, before she even puts him down. She has on her white uniform to go to work at Charlie's and she holds Termite out from her a ways, not to get her stockings run with his long toenails or her skirt stained with his fingers because he always has jam on them after breakfast.
"There's Termite." Nonie puts him in the chair with his legs under him like he always sits. Anybody else's legs would go to sleep, all day like that. "You keep an eye on him, Lark," Nonie tells me, "and give him some lemonade when it gets warmer. You can put the radio in the kitchen window. That way he can hear it from out here too." Nonie straightens Termite. "Get him one of those cleaner-bag ribbons from inside. I got to go, Charlie will have my ass."
A car horn blares in the alley. Termite blares too then, trying to sound like the horn. "Elise is here," Nonie says. "Don't forget to wash the dishes, and wipe off his hands." She's already walking off across the grass, but Termite is outside so he doesn't mind her going. Elise waves at me from inside her Ford. She's a little shape in the shine of glare on the window, then the gravel crunches and they're moving off fast, like they're going somewhere important. "Termite," I say to him, and he says it back to me. He always gets the notes right, without saying the words. His sounds are like a one-toned song, and the day is still and flat. It's seven in the morning and here and there a little bit of air moves, in pieces, like a tease, like things are getting full so slow no one notices. On the kitchen wall we have one of those glass vials with blue water in it, and the water rises if it's going to storm. The water is all the way to the top and it's like a test now to wait and see if the thing works, or if it's so cheap it's already broken. "Termite," I tell him, "I'll fix the radio. Don't worry." He's got to have something to listen to. He moves his fingers the way he does, with his hands up and all his fingers pointing, then curving, each in a separate motion, fast or careful. He never looks at his fingers but I always think he hears or knows something through them, like he does it for some reason. Charlie says he's just spastic, that's a spastic motion; Nonie says he's fidgety, with whatever he has that he can't put to anything. His fingers never stop moving unless we give him something to hold, then he holds on so tight we have to pry whatever it is away from him. Nonie says that's just cussedness. I think when he holds something his fingers rest. He doesn't always want to keep hearing things.
My nightgown is so thin I shouldn't be standing out here, though it's not like it matters. Houses on both sides of the alley have seen about everything of one another from their secondfloor windows. No one drives back here but the people who live here, who park their cars in the gravel driveways that run off the alley. We don't have a car, but the others do, and the Tuccis have three--two that run and one that doesn't. It's early summer and the alley has a berm of plush grass straight up the center....
Reviews
Alan Cheuse, Dallas Morning News...
"Once you open its hypnotic pages you will find yourself pulled like metal to a magnet . . . [Termite's] sequences are virtuoso segments in which Phillips plays English the way Casals played Bach."
Elissa Schappell, More ...
"A tour-de force of history, imagination and invention. It is resonant and profound, a masterpiece worth waiting for."
Ron Charles, front page, Washington Post Book World...
"Mysterious, affecting . . . reveals [a family's] tangled secrets in such a profound and intimate way that these ordinary, wounded people become both tragic and magnificent."
Heller McAlpin, Newsday...
"Jayne Anne Phillips writes with all five senses, paying attention--as few writers do--to sight, sound, taste, touch and smell in nearly every sentence of her tightly constructed, extraordinary new novel . . . a powerful reading experience, at once poetic and electrifying."
Colette Bancroft, St. Petersburg Times...
"Phillips taps into powerful magic with a tale that surprises to its last page . . . A Jewel of a book."
Julia Keller, Chicago Tribune...
"Luminous and haunting and singular . . . [Lark and Termite]feels as if it has been taken straight from the griddle and is still too hot to touch. And because it deals with issues over which people have been arguing for centuries--families and war--the novel's rare immediacy is really quite spectacular."
Margaret Quanne, The Columbus Dispatch...
"Reading this novel is like listening to music in which some of the notes are outside the normal realm of human hearing, but felt deep in the body."
Malena Watrous, The San Francisco Chronicle...
"A true work of art . . . that seems destined to last, on bookshelves and in readers' hearts. [P]lumbs the depths of consciousness with potent and poetic language . . . You finish wanting to turn back to the first pages and start over, making sure not to miss a single note."
Brooke Allen, Wall Street Journal...
"An original examination of the strange durability of family ties."
Kathryn Harrison, The New York Times Book Review...
"Jayne Anne Phillips renders what is realistically impossible with such authority that the reader never questions its truth. This is the alchemy of great fiction: the fantastic dream that's created in Lark and Termite is one the reader enters without ever looking back."
John Marshall, Seattle Post-Intelligencer ...
"Haunting . . . A rigorous and demanding work of complex literary architecture . . . Make no mistake: Phillips's January novel has set a high literary bar that will challenge subsequent novels in 2009."
Perrin I...
"Lark and Termite offers substantial rewards for readers who value passages of gorgeous, intelligent writing with intricate literary architecture."
About the Creator
Jayne Anne Phillips was born in Buckhannon, West Virginia. She is the author of three novels, MotherKind (2000), Shelter (1994) and Machine Dreams (1984), and two collections of widely anthologized stories, Fast Lanes (1987) and Black Tickets (1979). She is the recipient of a Guggenheim Fellowship, two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships, and a Bunting Fellowship. She has been awarded the Sue Kaufman Prize for First Fiction (1980) and an Academy Award in Literature (1997) by the American Academy of Arts and Letters. Her work has been translated into twelve languages, and has appeared in Granta, Harper’s, DoubleTake, and The Norton Anthology of Contemporary Fiction. She is currently Professor of English and Director of the MFA Program at Rutgers-Newark, the State University of New Jersey. Her new novel, Termite, is forthcoming from Knopf.